Interpretation of delayed suspended sediment transport during flood events from the perspective of movement characteristics

•Flood events entering the Three Gorges Reservoir can be classified into six types.•The flood event types affect the propagation of flood peak and suspended sediment peaks in different ways.•Initial water-sediment asynchrony characteristics most influence delayed suspended sediment transport in the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam) 2024-11, Vol.644, p.132127, Article 132127
Hauptverfasser: Li, Xin, Ren, Jinqiu, Xue, Juli, Xu, Quanxi, Yuan, Jing, Zhang, Wei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Flood events entering the Three Gorges Reservoir can be classified into six types.•The flood event types affect the propagation of flood peak and suspended sediment peaks in different ways.•Initial water-sediment asynchrony characteristics most influence delayed suspended sediment transport in the reservoir.•The impoundment of upper cascade reservoirs and reservoir scheduling increase the transport lag of suspended sediment. Different velocities of flood and suspended sediment peaks during flood events result in the delayed transport of suspended sediment, which is exacerbated by reservoir impoundment. The diversity of flood events, the asynchronous pattern of suspended sediment peaks during flood formation and human activities lead to notable differences in the propagation of flood peaks and suspended sediment peaks and subsequently affect the suspended sediment lag, which poses certain problems and challenges for watershed governance, especially reservoir management. In this paper, the Three Gorges Reservoir (TGR) is selected as the research object, and we adopts the analysis of measured data, K-means cluster analysis, 1-D mathematical model and random forest regression. First, the flood process of the TGR from 2003 to 2020 is selected, and then flood event types with nine flood indices are identified. The influences of different flood types on flood and suspended sediment peak propagation are subsequently clarified. We then systematically analyse the factors influencing flood and suspended sediment peak propagation, explore the contributions of different influencing factors to the suspended sediment transport lag, and assess the reasons for the recent changes in the suspended sediment transport lag. The results show that (1) flood events entering the TGR can be approximately classified into six different types, the long-duration and dwarf-fat type (Type 1, 6.59 %), the sharp-thin and early-peak type (Type 2, 20.88 %), the medium-duration and conventional type (Type 3, 27.47 %), the short-duration and sharp-thin type (Type 4, 25.27 %), the long-duration and dramatic-change type (Type 5, 5.49 %), and the medium-duration and multiple-peaks type (Type 6, 14.29 %). (2) Different flood event types result in different effects on the propagation of both the flood and suspended sediment peak. Under the condition of a reservoir flood limit level of 145 m, the flood types for which Qp propagates are as follows from slowest to fastest: Type 1 > Type 5 > Type 2 > T
ISSN:0022-1694
DOI:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2024.132127